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Evaluation
of patients treated with natalizumab finds no new cases of
PML
An independent clinical and laboratory study of more than
3000 people treated with the drug natalizumab (Tysabri®)
for multiple sclerosis (MS), Crohn's disease, and rheumatoid
arthritis has found no evidence of new cases of the often-fatal
disorder called progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy
(PML). The laboratory component of the study was coordinated
by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
(NINDS) at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), working
in conjunction with the NIH Clinical Center. Clinical and
neuroradiological experts from other institutions also participated.
Results of the study will be published in the March 2, 2006,
issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
Natalizumab, an immune system-modifying drug, was approved
by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in November 2004
to treat relapsing-remitting MS. Studies have shown that it
can substantially reduce the frequency of relapses in that
disease. However, the drug was withdrawn from the market and
from clinical trials in February 2005 after the manufacturer
identified 2 cases of PML in MS patients who had received
the drug. A person with Crohn's disease who had received natalizumab
was also diagnosed with PML. The current study was conducted
to determine whether other people treated with natalizumab
were at risk of PML. Symptoms of PML include mental deterioration,
problems with vision, speech, balance, and movement, and,
in most cases, coma and death.
"This
was an important opportunity for NIH to use its specialized
expertise in cooperation with the private sector to address
a pressing and unanticipated risk of a devastating disorder,"
said NIH Director Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D.
"This
study was designed to address a critical, immediate need for
patient safety in the people who participated in clinical
trials of this drug," says Eugene Major, Ph.D., of NINDS.
"We had to assess who else might be at risk." Dr.
Major served as the chair of the independent adjudication
committee (IAC) that was established to evaluate the risk
of PML in natalizumab-treated patients after it was withdrawn
from the market. He is chief of the NINDS' Laboratory of Molecular
Medicine and Neuroscience and an expert on the virus (known
as JC virus) that causes PML. Other members of the IAC were
neurologist David B. Clifford, M.D., of Washington University
School of Medicine in St. Louis, and neuroradiologist Tarek
Yousry, M.D., of the Institute of Neurology, Queens Square
in London, U.K.
While
the study did not find any evidence for new cases of PML,
the researchers cannot say for certain that the patients who
received natalizumab will not develop the disease in the future,
Dr. Major cautions. The risk associated with longer-term treatment
with natalizumab is also unknown.
Most
people in the world are exposed to JC virus during childhood,
and antibodies to the virus are detectable throughout life.
However, the initial infection usually does not cause noticeable
symptoms. PML is extremely rare and, when it occurs, it is
almost always in people whose immune systems are compromised.
The
researchers invited patients who had received natalizumab
in clinical trials for MS, Crohn's disease, and rheumatoid
arthritis to take part in the evaluation. A total of 3,116
patients exposed to natalizumab participated. They underwent
a detailed clinical history, physical examination, and brain
magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. Some patients' cerebrospinal
fluid was tested for JC virus DNA. The IAC reviewed the clinical
information and MRIs of patients who were identified as having
signs of possible PML. Dr. Major's research team at NINDS,
in conjunction with the Department of Laboratory Medicine
at NIH, analyzed the cerebrospinal fluid samples for JC virus
DNA. The manufacturers of natalizumab, Biogen Idec and Elan
Pharmaceuticals, provided support for the clinical procedures
and MRIs. The companies also provided some reagents and supplies
for laboratory testing.
A
total of 44 patients were referred to the IAC because of clinical
findings of possible PML, abnormalities on MRI, or a high
blood level of JC virus. None of them had detectable JC virus
DNA in the cerebrospinal fluid. Only the three previously
reported cases of PML were confirmed. The data suggested that
the risk of PML associated with natalizumab was approximately
1 in 1000 among these patients, who had been treated with
natalizumab for an average of 17.9 months.
The
study did not formally include patients who were treated with
natalizumab outside of clinical trials. However, since PML
is a very severe disease, it is likely that any PML in other
patients who received natalizumab would have been diagnosed,
the researchers say.
The
results of this study are important not only for natalizumab,
but also for similar drugs that are now in development, says
Dr. Major. "Even under close evaluation, PML remains
a rare disease. But as we alter the immune system, we need
to understand what unintended effects it might have. This
experience tells us that we need to understand more about
how the JC virus causes disease in order to find ways to intervene."
In the future, it might be possible to monitor people given
natalizumab and similar drugs for activation of the JC virus
in order to prevent PML, he adds.
Contact:
Natalie Frazin or Paul Girolami
301-496-5924
NIH/National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
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